Now a council
uses cameras in bean tins to catch bin 'criminals'
UK Daily Mail | March 20, 2007
A local council is to use hidden
cameras to catch residents who leave rubbish out on the wrong day.
CCTV devices will be disguised
inside objects such as baked bean cans and house bricks to film
offenders.
The covert surveillance has been
ordered by Ealing council to target "enviro-criminals" - those who
leave out black bags when they should not or let the contents spill
on to the pavement. Offenders can be issued with onthe-spot fines of
up to £1,000.
Cameras will be installed around
the London borough before the change in collections from weekly to
fortnightly. But today the move was attacked as an invasion of
privacy.
The cameras, which cost about £200
each, are triggered by builtin movement sensors. It is understood
they are to be used to catch large-scale fly-tippers and graffiti
vandals but the council said residents who failed to abide by refuse
collection times would also be punished.
Tory-controlled Ealing said: "To
catch vandals and envirocriminals, cameras disguised as anything
from tin cans to house bricks will email images to the council's
CCTV control centre."
Will Brooks, the Tory councillor
responsible for environment and transport, said anyone who broke the
rules on collection would be considered to be a fly-tipper.
Labour councillor Virendra Sharma
said: "I predict a lot of complaints about this method of catching
litter louts. It is possible that many will question the motives of
using CCTV and feel it is an infringement of privacy.
"Educating people on rubbish
collection times is a better longterm solution than spy cameras in
baked bean tins."
In 2004, the Audit Commission
rated Ealing as having the dirtiest streets in London. Human rights
group Liberty said: "Let's give people more opportunities to be
clean and green rather than declaring that if you put your bin out
at the wrong time you are committing criminal activity."
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